Information and Communication technology Brazil-Israel
Thursday, December 31, 2015
Brazil tops cyberattack ranking in LatAm
Labels:
Brazil News
The country has seen more than 27 million attacks this year so far, says research
By Angelica Mari for Brazil Tech
Internet users in Brazil are the most targeted by cybercriminals in Latin America, according to a recent study.
Data released by Kaspersky Lab suggests that the number of cyberattacks in the country is way higher than in other nations in the region, based on the 400 million such incidents that it recorded in 2015 so far.
The company has recorded 27.642.589 hacking attempts in Brazil this year, so 31 percent of all local Internet users, while countries such as Mexico, Peru, Colombia and Venezuela hovered around 21 percent.
Brazil also happens to be the country with the highest Internet penetration in Latin America.
According to William Beer, managing director of cybersecurity at management consultancy Alvarez & Marsal, Brazilian organizations have a lot of work to do when it comes to protecting information online.
"There is a lack of focus on cybersecurity both in the public and private sector. Senior executives at organizations don't really see that as a priority," Beer tells ZDNet.
The economic crisis Brazil is currently experiencing is an additional area of concern, according to Beer. The security expert recalls that when the downturn hit the UK in 2008, the first area that suffered cuts was security.
"That is because security wasn't considered something that would provide immediate returns. However, those organizations suffered to rebuild their security teams and strategy later on," he says.
Monday, December 28, 2015
In Face Of Global Shortage, World Leaders Praise Israel’s Water Technologies At WATEC Conference
Labels:
Israel News
25,000 people from 100 countries are attending the 2015
Water Technology and Environment Control Exhibition (WATEC) conference held in
Tel Aviv this week, one of the largest water technology events in the world,
featuring 150 exhibitors and dozens of speakers.
By Einat
Paz-Frankel, NoCamels
Despite
tensions in the region, 25,000 people from 100 countries are attending the 2015
Water Technology and Environment Control Exhibition (WATEC) conference held in
Tel Aviv this week, one of the largest water technology events in the world,
featuring 150 exhibitors and dozens of speakers.
According to
the UN, 1.2 billion people (almost one-fifth of the world’s
population) live in areas where water is scarce, and another 500 million people
are nearing this situation. This pressing issue is met at WATEC this week
with a host of Israeli solutions, from seawater desalination and water
conservation, to grey water recycling and wastewater treatment. Other pressing
issues on the agenda include drip irrigation (an agricultural technology
developed and perfected in Israel primarily by Netafim) and water purification.
Many WATEC attendees
are looking to bring such solutions to their countries. And so is Mark LeChevallier,
director of innovation and environmental stewardship for American Water, one of
America’s largest publicly traded water utility companies. His company is
“looking into the Israeli water companies and water-related technologies,
trying to find the next big thing and import it to the US,” says LeChevallier,
who’s currently meeting with Israeli entrepreneurs at WATEC in order to find
projects to collaborate with.
Nuno Fragoso
and Angeles Ramos, executives at Spanish engineering firm EPTISA who are attending
the conference, tell NoCamels they’re looking for water technologies to be used
in arid areas of Southern Spain, but not only. “We have projects all around the
world, we can help Israeli companies expand into Latin America,” Fragoso
says. Angeles says EPTISA is looking “to form a consortium of strong
companies that can solve water shortages. I believe Israel can provide these
solutions.”
Chinese
executive Yanhua Ca of Umore Consulting Group, says she has brought three of
her clients – large, Chinese manufacturers – to WATEC. “They’re looking for
industrial wastewater solutions, specifically recycling and treatment
technologies.”
According to
Israel’s Minister of Economy Aryeh Deri, who spoke at the conference,
Israel is a “global leader in developing innovative and breakthrough
technologies to manage scarce water resources.”
Since 50
percent of Israel is made up of desert – and with recurring droughts – over the
years the Israeli government, scientists and companies have developed
cutting-edge solutions to avoid water shortages.
Now, most of Israel’s drinking water comes
from desalination plants that are scattered around the country. “Israel has
become an oasis of water technologies,” Deri told a mixed crowd of Israelis and
internationals at a WATEC panel discussion on Tuesday.
As retold at
the conference, Israel used to rely on natural resources for its water, like
the Sea of Galilee, but quickly discovered that “Galilee is really a pond,” as
desalination expert Ron Yachini of IDE humorously put it, and that the
Jordan River is “famous and holy but lacks water,” as former Israeli president
Shimon Peres said at the event.
Now that
Israel doesn’t solely rely on natural water, its remarkable water management
solutions inspire others – including countries in Africa, Asia and America – to
implement technologies developed in the Startup Nation.
“Israeli
drip irrigation technologies can transform the lives of millions”
According to
William Samoei Ruto, Kenya’s deputy president, only 4 percent of Kenya’s
available water is used, and the country is looking for solutions to make the
other 96 percent usable. The African country looks to Israel, “the superpower
of water,” for solutions, he said. “We don’t want to reinvent the wheel.”
Drip
irrigation – an Israeli technology that carefully dispenses drops of water to
plants, thus conserving water – is especially important for agriculture in
Africa, Ruto said. “We have come here with open minds to benefit from Israeli
technologies that can transform the lives of millions in our
continent and
country.”
Governor of
Arizona Doug Ducey said Israel and his state share the same climate and that he
feels “truly honored and privileged to be given an unparalleled opportunity to
collaborate.” He praised the fact that 80 percent of Israel’s sewage water is
reused; combined with extensive desalination for drinking water, these efforts
give Israel significant water supplies. “You figured it out,” he said.
And while
Arizona is looking forward to collaborating with Israel, California, which is
suffering from extreme drought, already provides proof that Israeli water
technologies can be successfully implemented elsewhere in the world. Israeli
company IDE and its partners are currently building a desalination plant just
outside San Diego, which could potentially provide Californians with 54 million
gallons of water a day. The plant is using technology Israelis have been using
for years, reverse-osmosis, which involves forcing seawater through a film with
tiny holes that allow only water molecules to pass through, while the larger
salt molecules cannot.
According to
Richard Bloom, a California Assembly member attending WATEC, “up until now,
Sacramento homes didn’t have water meters, because water has been taken for
granted for so long; this needs to change. We never gave another thought to
water, and now we’re forced to conserve water and learn from Israel, a world
leader in the field.”
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Report: LATAM Digital Economy Created US$195 Billion In Revenue In 8 Years
Labels:
Brazil News
More than half of Latin Americans are involved with the digital economy.
By Narayan Ammachchi for Near shore Americas
The digital
economy in Latin America created 900,000 jobs and US$195 billion in revenue in
the space of eight years between 2005 and 2013, finds a study sponsored by the
Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).
The revenue
it generated is equivalent to 4.3% of cumulative GDP growth in the region,
the reported released in the Futurecom conference in Brazil stated.
This
significant growth in revenue and adoption has given rise to a call for
setting up a digital ecosystem that provides greater space for Latin Americans
to excel.
Although
more than half of Latin Americans are involved in the digital
economy in some way or the other, most of the applications they are using
are not created in the region. Of the 100 most-visited websites in the region,
only 26 are local. As a result, 63% of the traffic flow is international, going
mainly toward the US.
Therefore,
the study advocates the creation of a single Latin American digital market that
capitalizes on some of the region’s unique advantages. For example, most of the
countries in the region, except for Brazil, speak Spanish.
The digital
economy in the region is mainly inclusive of telecoms and internet-based
services. The report however admits that decline in the price of services and
equipments lured a lot of players into digital economy, resulting in a sharp
rise in number of Internet users.
The report
also calls for creating a productive model based on entrepreneurship and
innovation, capable of developing a local industry content, powerful
applications and services, creating more jobs and opportunities for the
society.
The ECLAC
has often argued that digital economy is a crucial force for boosting
structural change, making progress to reduce inequality and strengthening the
social inclusion.
The research
was headed by Argentine researcher Raúl Katz, professor at the Columbia
University, and funded, among others, by Telefonica. The survey also presents
recommendations based on workshops held in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia,
Mexico and Peru.
According to
the Boston Consulting Group, Brazil alone will account for about 2.6% of
the global digital growth by 2016. It is believed that more than 85 million
people connected to the World Wide Web in Brazil.
Monday, December 21, 2015
Europe's hottest startups 2015: Tel Aviv
Labels:
Israel News
Tel Aviv is where the money is. The startup nation became
the exit nation in 2014, with Israeli tech sales and IPOs hitting $15 billion
(£9.5bn) according to analysis by PriceWaterhouseCoopers.
Oliver Franklin-Wallis, wired
magazine
Expect 2015 to be another huge year, with $910 million
raised in one January week alone and Outbrain and IronSource preparing IPOs.
"What sets Israel and Tel Aviv apart is its openness," says Naomi
Krieger Carmy, director of the British embassy's UK-Israel Tech Hub. "You
can meet almost anyone, and everyone knows and talks to -- and about -- each
other."
The next step, says Windward CEO Ami Daniel, is scaling up.
"Entrepreneurs will focus not only on innovative technologies," he
says, "but on building disruptive companies out of Israel."
CONSUMER PHYSICS
Consumer Physics wants
to build a molecular map of the world. Founded by Dror Sharon and Damian
Goldring in 2011, it makes the $250 USB-sized SCiO molecular spectrometer that
can identify the chemical make-up of objects. It raised $2.7m on Kickstarter,
and says it will be ready to ship its first SCiO this autumn, with 1,000
developers signed up.
PLAYBUZZ
PlayBuzz is an
app and tool for creating listicles and personality quizzes. Founded in 2013 by
Shaul Olmert -- son of former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert -- the company
now claims 80 million unique users per month. In March 2015, it announced $16m
in funding to expand, and has hired 60 staff. It has also opened an office in
New York.
STOREDOT
Spun out of Tel Aviv University in 2012, StoreDot has developed a smartphone
battery that can be charged in one minute. It has raised $42m in Series B
funding from private investors to develop the battery, which uses bio-organic
compounds to create ultra-fast charge storage. It is now working on partnering
with smartphone makers and plans a 2016 launch.
WINDWARD
Founded in 2010 by former Israeli Navy officers, Windward analyses commercial satellite
feeds and maritime data to track the location and contents of every major
seafaring vessel in the world. The company secured £7m in funding led by
Horizon Ventures in April 2014. Its aim: real-time updates and insights for
maritime markets and intelligence agencies.
MOOVIT
Moovit's transport
app provides real-time public navigation on buses, trains and tubes. Using a
combination of public-data feeds and feedback from users, it claims to provide
travel times more accurately than its rivals. Founded in 2011, the company had
15 million users worldwide and, in January 2015, raised $50m from investors
including Nokia Growth Partners and BMW.
SIMILARWEB
SimilarWeb is
a tool that lets you analyse the performance of websites and apps. It provides
traffic rankings and insights by analysing a pool of data from various sources.
In November 2014, it raised $15 million in series D funding with plans to
expand into app analytics and to open a New York office, having already
expanded to London and Dubai.
ZEBRA MEDICAL VISION
Zebra Medical teaches
computers to diagnose diseases. Founded in 2014 by Eyal Gura, Eyal Toledano and
Elad Benjamin, the startup has partnered with Israeli imaging centres and
universities worldwide to build a database of images. "We have millions of
diagnosed MRIs, CT scans and X-Rays," says Gura. In April it secured $8m
in funding led by Khosla Ventures.
APPSFLYER
More than 5,000 advertisers use AppsFlyer's analytics platform to measure
campaigns and user acquisition on their smartphone apps -- for example,
tracking the impact of a Super Bowl ad on downloads in real time. Founded by
Oren Kaniel and Reshef Mann in 2011, it tracked two billion app installs in
2014 and claims it is now found on nine out of ten smartphones.
ADALLOM
Adallom provides
security to companies using software such as GoogleApps and Office365 by
detecting potential security breaches in real time. Founded in 2012 by former
members of the Israeli Intelligence Corps, it counts Netflix and Pixar as
clients. Since appearing in last year's list it has raised a further $30m in
series C funding, led by Rembrandt and HP Ventures.
FEEX
Calling itself "the Robin Hood of fees", FeeX identifies hidden charges in
investment and retirement funds and suggests ways for users to save money.
Founded in 2012 by Yoav Zurel, David Weisz and Waze co-founder Uri Levine, it
claims to have saved $277m to date. In August 2014, it raised $6.5m in series B
funding, with plans to expand further in the US.
Thursday, December 10, 2015
IBM Brazil places bets on Watson
Labels:
Brazil News
Big Blue appoints executive to widen the footprint of its cognitive computing platform among Brazilian organizations
By Angelica Mari for Brazil Tech
By Angelica Mari for Brazil Tech
IBM Brazil
is investing on expanding the presence of its cognitive computing platform
Watson in Brazil with the appointment of an executive to develop the business
area.
The Big
Blue's former business development head for SaaS and independent software
vendors (ISVs) David Dias is now leading the channel and ecosystem operation
for Watson in Brazil.
As well as
generating new Watson deals in Brazil, Dias has the goal of creating and
developing an ecosystem of ISVs, start-ups and businesses partners for Watson
and bringing the technology closer to developers and research and development
organizations in the country.
Watson is
possibly the best-known example of artificial intelligence in use today. The
platform is designed so that business users can literally ask questions -- from
medical diagnoses and the likely outcome of business decisions to answers to
legal questions -- on the spot.
IBM has a
large R&D facility in São Paulo which has been involved in the development
of Watson's technology and in the analysis of data in Brazilian Portuguese -
something that the company had intended only once interest in Watson turned
into actual deals.
Since it
started to pitch Watson to Brazilian customers last year, IBM signed a deal
with Bradesco, one of the largest banks in the country, which will be used in
its call centers to improve internal communication and speed up customer
service.
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